THE NEW YORKER 91 raced in the Hitchcock colors, in both the Brook and the Grand National. G ETTING to Jamaica, the Long Island Claiming Stakes and the Interborough Handicap will be run there Saturday, and the Remsen Handicap for two-year-olds and the Continental Handicap, a $10,000 race for older horses, will be run on the closing day, October 21 st. . .=-=..' =--:;: .:--::.. . =::: :-." I MUST admit that I'm impressed by the form of Victory Morn. Last weekend he beat eleven runners in the Richard Johnson Stakes at Laurel and from all accounts had something in hand. Alfred Vanderbilt could do worse than make up a match between Victory Morn and Bimelech if his Pimlico Spe- cial should go sour. A year ago EI Chico hadn't lost a race; now he doesn't seem to be able to win one. He finished last in the Cap- ital Handicap on the opening day at Laurel, and fifth in a field of seven more moderate animals last Saturday. "::;1: øW "" . .. · Øt ,//U " N OTEs ON AN OLD RACE CARD: Peter Widener presenting the Futurity Trophy to Ed Bradley, and Bradley remarking, "I've been trying for a long time to win this, so I guess I'm entitled to it." . . . Charlie How- ard planning to import more Argen- tine horses. . . . Morty Mahony, man- ager of the pari-mutuel departments of the Maryland and New England tracks, inspecting Belmont Park.... Colonel Martingale declaring that the most un- bounded optimists in racing are the men who get up the probable odds for the newspapers. -AUDAX MINOR ' "....--,.:, .If ' ....,. 1/.1 " -:....-.=_..:. --. , . . . In the Sawtooth Mountain region of Idaho, you'll nnd a "new world". . . a world of strange enchantment blanketed with deep powder snow. Skiers whisk down timber-free slopes and return to the mountatn-tops on four "chair ski lifts." Skaters whirl to gay music . . . swimmers plunge into outdoor warm-water pools walled with glass . . . and everyone wishes that their joyous holiday would last forever. That is Sun Valley! Passengers who arrived in N ew York this morning in a British liner brought ashore with them copies of a song writ- ten and sung during the voyage by the film star Bob Hope. Set to the music of the popular melody': "Thanks for the memory," it concludes with the verse: "Thanks for the memory, good old Chamberlain; He won't quit till it's done. He's out to show this upset world We don't need a Napoleon." One of the passengers, Mr. Harry M. Warner, president of Warner Bros., the film producers, said on landing: "The liberty we once fought the British to ob- tain we may now have to fight with them to retain." - Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, another pas- senger, asked to be excused from making any comment.-London Daily Telegraph é;; Morning Post. It would have been an anticlimax, anyway. Go this winter. Superb accommodations . . . modern hotel facilities and service. . . await you at Sun Valley Lodge. Full information on request. Just write or wire . . . W. P. Rogers, General Manager, Sun Valley, Idaho. :{:"':"-". ",. . M SUN VALLEY ""'--""" "'" , , ,.. '..', . ... " . ". ',:.:: ".. .... ..... . ... '," .